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Barry
06-15-2010, 01:14 PM
Cities eye taxes on marijuana- Watch Sonoma County (https://www.watchsonomacounty.com/2010/06/cities/cities-eye-taxes-on-marijuana/)


By SAM SCOTT
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT

https://www.watchsonomacounty.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/marijuanaclinic-300x224.jpg
Aimee Polacci, the garden resources manager at Peace through
Medicine Healing Center in Sebastopol, arranges marijuana plant
clones on Monday (JOHN BURGESS/PD)If California voters want to legalize it, Larry Robinson wants to tax it.

The Sebastopol councilman is asking his fellow city leaders to consider ways to tax marijuana sales if California voters approve a measure on the November ballot that would legalize pot.

Aimee Polacci, the garden resources manager at Peace through Medicine Healing Center in Sebastopol, arranges marijuana plant clones on Monday (JOHN BURGESS/PD)

The council is scheduled to discuss the idea at its meeting Tuesday night, joining a growing number of cities intrigued by the bottom-line benefits of taxing marijuana.

Robinson said he’s not asking the council to take a stance on legalizing recreational use of cannabis. He just wants the city to position itself to move quickly if voters approve the November ballot measure, which would allow adults to possess and cultivate limited amounts of marijuana.

“It’s just recognizing that there’s a relatively good chance that this initiative will pass,” Robinson said. “I just want the city of Sebastopol to be in the best possible position to both regulate and tax it.”

Robinson is proposing to place a measure before Sebastopol voters in November that would authorize the city to tax marijuana sales. The council must vote on the concept by August to make the ballot.

Robinson said he envisions a 1 percent to 2 percent local tax on all marijuana sales, both on existing sales of medical marijuana and potential future sales of pot for recreational use.

Rich Maloney, who purchases medical marijuana at the only cannabis dispensary in Sebastopol, Peace in Medicine Healing Center, said he would be willing to pay more if pot was taxed by local government. The state already taxes sales of medical marijuana.

He credits cannabis for getting him off a host of narcotics that he began taking after breaking his leg in a motorcycle accident a year and a half ago.

Robert Jacob, executive director of Peace in Medicine, which soon plans to open another clinic in Sebastopol, said he also welcomes paying more taxes.

The more the nonprofit business contributes to the community, the more people see it as a local asset, he said.

“Taxation provides legitimacy,” he said.

Jacob, however, would only support the tax if Sonoma County adopts a similar policy. Otherwise Peace in Medicine would lose its ability to draw clients, he said.

Already, the clinic has to compete with dispensaries that have arisen since a Superior Court judge struck down Sonoma County’s marijuana dispensary ordinance last December. The ruling is under appeal.

Sonoma County Supervisor Mike Kerns said he doesn’t see the county taking on marijuana taxes in the near future. It’s premature to act before state voters decide on the matter — and before the appeals case on the county’s dispensary ordinance is settled, he said.

As a former cop, Kerns also has concerns about legalizing a “gateway drug” that could lead to more problems.

Still other local leaders are more open to the idea. Santa Rosa City Councilman Gary Wysocky said he would be interested in looking at marijuana businesses as part of an overhaul of business license fees or in addition to other “sin taxes.”

“If it was legal, it should be taxed just like alcohol and tobacco,” he said.

Other cities have already cashed in from marijuana sales. Last year, Oakland became first U.S. city to impose a local tax on medical marijuana dispensaries.

Berkeley leaders have recently discussed implementing taxes on recreational and medical use of the drug.

Discussions in Sebastopol are very much in the early stage. Councilman Guy Wilson said he is open to all intelligent ideas to raise revenue, but is not convinced that allowing recreational marijuana sales would be worth the burdens to the system.

“I am not convinced we have to do something right now,” he said.

Barry
06-16-2010, 12:29 AM
Sebastopol rejects pot tax, for now
Sebastopol rejects pot tax, for now | PressDemocrat.com (https://www.pressdemocrat.com/article/20100615/ARTICLES/100619657/1350?Title=Sebastopol-rejects-pot-tax-for-now)

By BOB NORBERG
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT.COM

Published: Tuesday, June 15, 2010 at 3:00 a.m.
Last Modified: Tuesday, June 15, 2010 at 11:29 p.m.

The Sebastopol City Council on Tuesday night rejected, on a 3-2 vote, a proposal to impose a business tax on the use of marijuana if it is legalized by voters in November.

“Do we want to be have store-front sales? Do we want Sebastopol to be the place where people come for their recreational marijuana?” asked Councilman Guy Wilson, who opposed the measure.

“My heart tells me we should wait until after the ballot in November,” said Councilwoman Linda Kelley.

The proposal was to put a tax not to exceed 5 percent on revenues of all marijuana-related businesses, should Californians approve a ballot measure legalizing marijuana for anyone over 21.

“We just adopted a budget that has been the most painful budget I’ve seen in 12 years on the council and we have the opportunity to potentially enhance our revenue stream,” said Councilman Larry Robinson, who proposed the tax.

Robinson said he was not advocating for the legalization, but felt Californians will eventually legalize it. “This is about whether the city of Sebastopol wants to be in the position to tax it if the state decided it is legal,” Robinson said. “If this council doesn’t want it, the next one will.”

The proposal would have put a 5 percent business tax on all medical and recreational marijuana-related business, including the growers, distributors and stores. It is patterned after a similar tax that the city of Oakland imposed in May.

As a business tax that generates revenue for the city’s general fund, it would have only required a simple majority to pass.

The council felt, however, that it should wait to see the outcome of the November election before spending $10,000 to put it before Sebastopol voters.

Robinson and Councilwoman Kathleen Shaffer voted for the tax, while Robinson, Kelley and Mayor Sarah Gurney voted against it.
Buzz up!

Hotspring 44
06-16-2010, 01:26 AM
I'm only asking because I don't actually know.
Is there a sales-tax on heart pressure medicine? If so then the sale of medical marijuana should be taxed with one possible exception which is if it is truly nonprofit, otherwise, why should medical marijuana be taxed if heart pressure medicine is not taxed?


Cities eye taxes on marijuana- Watch Sonoma County (https://www.watchsonomacounty.com/2010/06/cities/cities-eye-taxes-on-marijuana/)